About run python file from php under windows 10 - php

I want to call the python file from php using exec() but the output always is blank, and i do not know what is the problem, can anybody help me?
This is php code
<?php
exec("D:\python27\python.exe C:\xampp\htdocs\hi.py");
?>
This is python code
print "Content-Type: text/HTML"
print
print"""
<html>
<body>
<h2>Hello World!</h2>
</body>
</html>
"""
I can run the python file along and the browser will display hello world!, however when i using exec() in php, it would not work.

as you said you are running it like apache->php->shell_exec(SUDO..)
So the apache user has to be in sudoers file, better you don't give sudo to apache instead give apache (www-data) user right to run your python program
put first line in your python script: #!/usr/bin/env python so the script knows which program to open it with..
then
change group:
chgrp www-data /path/to/python-script.py
make it executabel
chmod +x /path/to/python-script.py
try it
shell_exec("/path/to/python-script.py");
I hope it works ;)
TIPP: Apache and PHP are for delivering Documents and Strings, if you want some kind of control and an API start with nodejs and https://www.npmjs.com/package/rpi-gpio package. This way you will have one place for your solid automation environment

Related

Trigger script on html form submit [duplicate]

I'm trying to run a Python script from PHP using the following command:
exec('/usr/bin/python2.7 /srv/http/assets/py/switch.py arg1 arg2');
However, PHP simply doesn't produce any output. Error reporting is set to E_ALL and display_errors is on.
Here's what I've tried:
I used python2, /usr/bin/python2 and python2.7 instead of /usr/bin/python2.7
I also used a relative path instead of an absolute path which didn't change anything either.
I tried using the commands exec, shell_exec, system.
However, if I run
if (exec('echo TEST') == 'TEST')
{
echo 'exec works!';
}
it works perfectly fine while shutdown now doesn't do anything.
PHP has the permissions to access and execute the file.
EDIT: Thanks to Alejandro, I was able to fix the problem. If you have the same problem, don't forget that your webserver probably/hopefully doesn't run as root. Try logging in as your webserver's user or a user with similar permissions and try to run the commands yourself.
Tested on Ubuntu Server 10.04. I hope it helps you also on Arch Linux.
In PHP use shell_exec function:
Execute command via shell and return the complete output as a string.
It returns the output from the executed command or NULL if an error
occurred or the command produces no output.
<?php
$command = escapeshellcmd('/usr/custom/test.py');
$output = shell_exec($command);
echo $output;
?>
Into Python file test.py, verify this text in first line: (see shebang explain):
#!/usr/bin/env python
If you have several versions of Python installed, /usr/bin/env will
ensure the interpreter used is the first one on your environment's
$PATH. The alternative would be to hardcode something like
#!/usr/bin/python; that's ok, but less flexible.
In Unix, an executable file that's meant to be interpreted can indicate
what interpreter to use by having a #! at the start of the first line,
followed by the interpreter (and any flags it may need).
If you're talking about other platforms, of course, this rule does not
apply (but that "shebang line" does no harm, and will help if you ever
copy that script to a platform with a Unix base, such as Linux,
Mac, etc).
This applies when you run it in Unix by making it executable
(chmod +x myscript.py) and then running it directly: ./myscript.py,
rather than just python myscript.py
To make executable a file on unix-type platforms:
chmod +x myscript.py
Also Python file must have correct privileges (execution for user www-data / apache if PHP script runs in browser or curl)
and/or must be "executable". Also all commands into .py file must have correct privileges.
Taken from php manual:
Just a quick reminder for those trying to use shell_exec on a
unix-type platform and can't seem to get it to work. PHP executes as
the web user on the system (generally www for Apache), so you need to
make sure that the web user has rights to whatever files or
directories that you are trying to use in the shell_exec command.
Other wise, it won't appear to be doing anything.
I recommend using passthru and handling the output buffer directly:
ob_start();
passthru('/usr/bin/python2.7 /srv/http/assets/py/switch.py arg1 arg2');
$output = ob_get_clean();
If you want to know the return status of the command and get the entire stdout output you can actually use exec:
$command = 'ls';
exec($command, $out, $status);
$out is an array of all lines. $status is the return status. Very useful for debugging.
If you also want to see the stderr output you can either play with proc_open or simply add 2>&1 to your $command. The latter is often sufficient to get things working and way faster to "implement".
To clarify which command to use based on the situation
exec() - Execute an external program
system() - Execute an external program and display the output
passthru() - Execute an external program and display raw output
Source: http://php.net/manual/en/function.exec.php
Alejandro nailed it, adding clarification to the exception (Ubuntu or Debian) - I don't have the rep to add to the answer itself:
sudoers file:
sudo visudo
exception added:
www-data ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL
In my case I needed to create a new folder in the www directory called scripts. Within scripts I added a new file called test.py.
I then used sudo chown www-data:root scripts and sudo chown www-data:root test.py.
Then I went to the new scripts directory and used sudo chmod +x test.py.
My test.py file it looks like this. Note the different Python version:
#!/usr/bin/env python3.5
print("Hello World!")
From php I now do this:
$message = exec("/var/www/scripts/test.py 2>&1");
print_r($message);
And you should see: Hello World!
The above methods seem to be complex. Use my method as a reference.
I have these two files:
run.php
mkdir.py
Here, I've created an HTML page which contains a GO button. Whenever you press this button a new folder will be created in directory whose path you have mentioned.
run.php
<html>
<body>
<head>
<title>
run
</title>
</head>
<form method="post">
<input type="submit" value="GO" name="GO">
</form>
</body>
</html>
<?php
if(isset($_POST['GO']))
{
shell_exec("python /var/www/html/lab/mkdir.py");
echo"success";
}
?>
mkdir.py
#!/usr/bin/env python
import os
os.makedirs("thisfolder");
This is so trivial, but just wanted to help anyone who already followed along Alejandro's suggestion but encountered this error:
sh: blabla.py: command not found
If anyone encountered that error, then a little change needs to be made to the php file by Alejandro:
$command = escapeshellcmd('python blabla.py');
All the options above create new system process. Which is a performance nightmare.
For this purpose I stitched together PHP module with "transparent" calls to Python.
https://github.com/kirmorozov/runpy
It may be tricky to compile, but will save system processes and will let you keep Python runtime between PHP calls.
Inspired by Alejandro Quiroz:
<?php
$command = escapeshellcmd('python test.py');
$output = shell_exec($command);
echo $output;
?>
Need to add Python, and don't need the path.

Running PHP Script In Powershell keeps opening NotePad ++ rather than executing the PHP script

Okay, I'm at a bit of a loss here.
I'm testing out running PHP scripts from within powershell and it just keeps opening NotePad ++ rather than executing the script. I cannot figure out why this won't work...
I'm using a pretty basic PHP script to test:
<?php
echo 'Hello, World!';
?>
And I'm calling it using the standard way I run .ps1 files:
PS C:\php> c:\phpfiles\test25.php
The execution policy is set to unrestricted... what am I doing wrong?
You should pass the path of the file as an argument to the PHP executable. If (lets say) PHP is installed in c:\php, then you must do:
PS c:\php\php.exe -f c:\phpfiles\test25.php

Problems while calling python in PHP [duplicate]

I'm trying to run a Python script from PHP using the following command:
exec('/usr/bin/python2.7 /srv/http/assets/py/switch.py arg1 arg2');
However, PHP simply doesn't produce any output. Error reporting is set to E_ALL and display_errors is on.
Here's what I've tried:
I used python2, /usr/bin/python2 and python2.7 instead of /usr/bin/python2.7
I also used a relative path instead of an absolute path which didn't change anything either.
I tried using the commands exec, shell_exec, system.
However, if I run
if (exec('echo TEST') == 'TEST')
{
echo 'exec works!';
}
it works perfectly fine while shutdown now doesn't do anything.
PHP has the permissions to access and execute the file.
EDIT: Thanks to Alejandro, I was able to fix the problem. If you have the same problem, don't forget that your webserver probably/hopefully doesn't run as root. Try logging in as your webserver's user or a user with similar permissions and try to run the commands yourself.
Tested on Ubuntu Server 10.04. I hope it helps you also on Arch Linux.
In PHP use shell_exec function:
Execute command via shell and return the complete output as a string.
It returns the output from the executed command or NULL if an error
occurred or the command produces no output.
<?php
$command = escapeshellcmd('/usr/custom/test.py');
$output = shell_exec($command);
echo $output;
?>
Into Python file test.py, verify this text in first line: (see shebang explain):
#!/usr/bin/env python
If you have several versions of Python installed, /usr/bin/env will
ensure the interpreter used is the first one on your environment's
$PATH. The alternative would be to hardcode something like
#!/usr/bin/python; that's ok, but less flexible.
In Unix, an executable file that's meant to be interpreted can indicate
what interpreter to use by having a #! at the start of the first line,
followed by the interpreter (and any flags it may need).
If you're talking about other platforms, of course, this rule does not
apply (but that "shebang line" does no harm, and will help if you ever
copy that script to a platform with a Unix base, such as Linux,
Mac, etc).
This applies when you run it in Unix by making it executable
(chmod +x myscript.py) and then running it directly: ./myscript.py,
rather than just python myscript.py
To make executable a file on unix-type platforms:
chmod +x myscript.py
Also Python file must have correct privileges (execution for user www-data / apache if PHP script runs in browser or curl)
and/or must be "executable". Also all commands into .py file must have correct privileges.
Taken from php manual:
Just a quick reminder for those trying to use shell_exec on a
unix-type platform and can't seem to get it to work. PHP executes as
the web user on the system (generally www for Apache), so you need to
make sure that the web user has rights to whatever files or
directories that you are trying to use in the shell_exec command.
Other wise, it won't appear to be doing anything.
I recommend using passthru and handling the output buffer directly:
ob_start();
passthru('/usr/bin/python2.7 /srv/http/assets/py/switch.py arg1 arg2');
$output = ob_get_clean();
If you want to know the return status of the command and get the entire stdout output you can actually use exec:
$command = 'ls';
exec($command, $out, $status);
$out is an array of all lines. $status is the return status. Very useful for debugging.
If you also want to see the stderr output you can either play with proc_open or simply add 2>&1 to your $command. The latter is often sufficient to get things working and way faster to "implement".
To clarify which command to use based on the situation
exec() - Execute an external program
system() - Execute an external program and display the output
passthru() - Execute an external program and display raw output
Source: http://php.net/manual/en/function.exec.php
Alejandro nailed it, adding clarification to the exception (Ubuntu or Debian) - I don't have the rep to add to the answer itself:
sudoers file:
sudo visudo
exception added:
www-data ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL
In my case I needed to create a new folder in the www directory called scripts. Within scripts I added a new file called test.py.
I then used sudo chown www-data:root scripts and sudo chown www-data:root test.py.
Then I went to the new scripts directory and used sudo chmod +x test.py.
My test.py file it looks like this. Note the different Python version:
#!/usr/bin/env python3.5
print("Hello World!")
From php I now do this:
$message = exec("/var/www/scripts/test.py 2>&1");
print_r($message);
And you should see: Hello World!
The above methods seem to be complex. Use my method as a reference.
I have these two files:
run.php
mkdir.py
Here, I've created an HTML page which contains a GO button. Whenever you press this button a new folder will be created in directory whose path you have mentioned.
run.php
<html>
<body>
<head>
<title>
run
</title>
</head>
<form method="post">
<input type="submit" value="GO" name="GO">
</form>
</body>
</html>
<?php
if(isset($_POST['GO']))
{
shell_exec("python /var/www/html/lab/mkdir.py");
echo"success";
}
?>
mkdir.py
#!/usr/bin/env python
import os
os.makedirs("thisfolder");
This is so trivial, but just wanted to help anyone who already followed along Alejandro's suggestion but encountered this error:
sh: blabla.py: command not found
If anyone encountered that error, then a little change needs to be made to the php file by Alejandro:
$command = escapeshellcmd('python blabla.py');
All the options above create new system process. Which is a performance nightmare.
For this purpose I stitched together PHP module with "transparent" calls to Python.
https://github.com/kirmorozov/runpy
It may be tricky to compile, but will save system processes and will let you keep Python runtime between PHP calls.
Inspired by Alejandro Quiroz:
<?php
$command = escapeshellcmd('python test.py');
$output = shell_exec($command);
echo $output;
?>
Need to add Python, and don't need the path.

Running a Python script from PHP

I'm trying to run a Python script from PHP using the following command:
exec('/usr/bin/python2.7 /srv/http/assets/py/switch.py arg1 arg2');
However, PHP simply doesn't produce any output. Error reporting is set to E_ALL and display_errors is on.
Here's what I've tried:
I used python2, /usr/bin/python2 and python2.7 instead of /usr/bin/python2.7
I also used a relative path instead of an absolute path which didn't change anything either.
I tried using the commands exec, shell_exec, system.
However, if I run
if (exec('echo TEST') == 'TEST')
{
echo 'exec works!';
}
it works perfectly fine while shutdown now doesn't do anything.
PHP has the permissions to access and execute the file.
EDIT: Thanks to Alejandro, I was able to fix the problem. If you have the same problem, don't forget that your webserver probably/hopefully doesn't run as root. Try logging in as your webserver's user or a user with similar permissions and try to run the commands yourself.
Tested on Ubuntu Server 10.04. I hope it helps you also on Arch Linux.
In PHP use shell_exec function:
Execute command via shell and return the complete output as a string.
It returns the output from the executed command or NULL if an error
occurred or the command produces no output.
<?php
$command = escapeshellcmd('/usr/custom/test.py');
$output = shell_exec($command);
echo $output;
?>
Into Python file test.py, verify this text in first line: (see shebang explain):
#!/usr/bin/env python
If you have several versions of Python installed, /usr/bin/env will
ensure the interpreter used is the first one on your environment's
$PATH. The alternative would be to hardcode something like
#!/usr/bin/python; that's ok, but less flexible.
In Unix, an executable file that's meant to be interpreted can indicate
what interpreter to use by having a #! at the start of the first line,
followed by the interpreter (and any flags it may need).
If you're talking about other platforms, of course, this rule does not
apply (but that "shebang line" does no harm, and will help if you ever
copy that script to a platform with a Unix base, such as Linux,
Mac, etc).
This applies when you run it in Unix by making it executable
(chmod +x myscript.py) and then running it directly: ./myscript.py,
rather than just python myscript.py
To make executable a file on unix-type platforms:
chmod +x myscript.py
Also Python file must have correct privileges (execution for user www-data / apache if PHP script runs in browser or curl)
and/or must be "executable". Also all commands into .py file must have correct privileges.
Taken from php manual:
Just a quick reminder for those trying to use shell_exec on a
unix-type platform and can't seem to get it to work. PHP executes as
the web user on the system (generally www for Apache), so you need to
make sure that the web user has rights to whatever files or
directories that you are trying to use in the shell_exec command.
Other wise, it won't appear to be doing anything.
I recommend using passthru and handling the output buffer directly:
ob_start();
passthru('/usr/bin/python2.7 /srv/http/assets/py/switch.py arg1 arg2');
$output = ob_get_clean();
If you want to know the return status of the command and get the entire stdout output you can actually use exec:
$command = 'ls';
exec($command, $out, $status);
$out is an array of all lines. $status is the return status. Very useful for debugging.
If you also want to see the stderr output you can either play with proc_open or simply add 2>&1 to your $command. The latter is often sufficient to get things working and way faster to "implement".
To clarify which command to use based on the situation
exec() - Execute an external program
system() - Execute an external program and display the output
passthru() - Execute an external program and display raw output
Source: http://php.net/manual/en/function.exec.php
Alejandro nailed it, adding clarification to the exception (Ubuntu or Debian) - I don't have the rep to add to the answer itself:
sudoers file:
sudo visudo
exception added:
www-data ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL
In my case I needed to create a new folder in the www directory called scripts. Within scripts I added a new file called test.py.
I then used sudo chown www-data:root scripts and sudo chown www-data:root test.py.
Then I went to the new scripts directory and used sudo chmod +x test.py.
My test.py file it looks like this. Note the different Python version:
#!/usr/bin/env python3.5
print("Hello World!")
From php I now do this:
$message = exec("/var/www/scripts/test.py 2>&1");
print_r($message);
And you should see: Hello World!
The above methods seem to be complex. Use my method as a reference.
I have these two files:
run.php
mkdir.py
Here, I've created an HTML page which contains a GO button. Whenever you press this button a new folder will be created in directory whose path you have mentioned.
run.php
<html>
<body>
<head>
<title>
run
</title>
</head>
<form method="post">
<input type="submit" value="GO" name="GO">
</form>
</body>
</html>
<?php
if(isset($_POST['GO']))
{
shell_exec("python /var/www/html/lab/mkdir.py");
echo"success";
}
?>
mkdir.py
#!/usr/bin/env python
import os
os.makedirs("thisfolder");
This is so trivial, but just wanted to help anyone who already followed along Alejandro's suggestion but encountered this error:
sh: blabla.py: command not found
If anyone encountered that error, then a little change needs to be made to the php file by Alejandro:
$command = escapeshellcmd('python blabla.py');
All the options above create new system process. Which is a performance nightmare.
For this purpose I stitched together PHP module with "transparent" calls to Python.
https://github.com/kirmorozov/runpy
It may be tricky to compile, but will save system processes and will let you keep Python runtime between PHP calls.
Inspired by Alejandro Quiroz:
<?php
$command = escapeshellcmd('python test.py');
$output = shell_exec($command);
echo $output;
?>
Need to add Python, and don't need the path.

Integrating php in shell scripts for a cronjob?

I would like to execute a cronjob for a routine task every X hours. The cronjob basically executes a shell script which in turn uses a WGET command to download files from a remote server. However, before I run this shell script I want the cronjob to execute a php script which will check whether the update's available (there's no point in wasting BW and downloading the same file over and over again) and if it is, it should pass on the update URL to the shell script which in turn uses the WGET command.
The cronjobs are set from the hosts Admin Panel. There is no other way around it. Being a shared hosting service, I am not allowed access to other functions on PHP which might do the task for me either.
Is this possible? I am Linux illiterate. I have installed a few RPM's on Fedora but that's about it. Please bear with me. Thanks!
Just pass --timestamping to your wget command.
Alternatively if you are more familiar with PHP's ways you can check this question for a usable method.
Use a curl HEAD request to get the file's headers and parse out the Last-Modified: header.
To use a php script as a regular command line executable use this as a starting point:
#!/bin/env php
<?php
echo "Hello World\n";
Save the file without the .php and tuck it somewhere that your server won't serve it.
Next, set the executable bit so that you can execute the script like a regular program
(u+x in the following command means grant the [u]ser e[x]ecute privileges for helloworld, and chmod is the command that unix variants use to set file permissions)
Omit the $ in the following sequence, as it represents the command prompt
$ chmod u+x helloworld
now you can execute your commandline script by calling it in the bash prompt:
$ ls
helloworld
$ ./helloworld
Hello World
$
From here you can get the full path of the executable script:
$ readlink -f helloworld
/home/SPI/helloworld
And now you can install the cronjob using the path to your executable script.

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